KEY POINTS
  • Democrats have been negotiating with the Office of the U.S. Trade Representative, seeking assurances that Mexico and Canada will be able to enforce labor standards intended to protect U.S. manufacturing jobs.
  • Harry Broadman, who served in the George H.W. Bush and Bill Clinton administrations, says U.S. demands are "over the top" given the time frame.

Assurances sought by House Democrats on Mexican labor reform in order to ratify President Donald Trump's trade deal with Mexico and Canada this year are a "very tall order," according to Harry Broadman, who served as assistant U.S. trade representative under Bill Clinton.

Several Republican senators took to the chamber's floor Wednesday to push for the passage of the United States-Mexico-Canada Agreement, while Iowa GOP Sen. Chuck Grassley accused the Democratic-held House of having "no sense of urgency" to approve the USMCA, which is one of the GOP's key economic and political goals ahead of the 2020 election.